The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 249 contributions

Speeches by Cartlidge.

Every Hansard contribution by James Cartlidge this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 221240 of 249 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
20 Nov 2024Points of Order

On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. There are now widespread reports in the media of Storm Shadow missiles being used in Russian territory for the first time. To be clear, I entirely sympathise with the Secretary of State in his reluctance to provide an operational running commentary, but equally he will appreci

defence
100
20 Nov 2024Defence Programmes Developments

We have heard it all today. The Secretary of State claims that Labour is the party of defence, when barely an hour and a half ago, Prime Minister’s questions was taken by a Deputy Prime Minister who, along with the Foreign Secretary, voted against the renewal of Trident. The Secretary of State talks about inheriting a

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
858
18 Nov 2024Improving Service Life: Personnel and Families

On the subject of improving service life for service personnel and their families, thousands of families will be getting the unwelcome Christmas present this year of a 20% tax on the school fees that they pay to fund an independent boarding school or, otherwise, will have to allow their children’s education to be const

defencecost-of-livingeducation
92
18 Nov 2024Topical Questions

The Secretary of State says it is true that it is not normal practice for the UK to reveal the value of payments for military bases, but there have actually been several written answers, under this Government and previous ones, giving the costs of overseas bases. For example, in November 2015 the then Minister for the

defencehousinglabour-market
100
18 Nov 2024Topical Questions

In relation to the cost of renting back our own military base on the Chagos islands, last week the Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, the hon. Member for Cardiff South and Penarth (Stephen Doughty), said that the reason the Government refused to tell us what the cost will be is that “it is

defencehousinglabour-market
86
18 Nov 2024Ukraine

I join the Chair of the Defence Committee, the hon. Member for Slough (Mr Dhesi), in strongly welcoming the decision by the United States to permit Ukraine to use long-range missiles in Kursk. I know the Secretary of State does not want to go into operational detail—I understand that—but I assure him of our support if

defence
102
18 Nov 2024 Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

That is an excellent point. I pay tribute to those sorts of schools and how they share in society’s commitment to our armed forces. It has been Labour policy since the 2017 general election—seven and a half years ago—to introduce VAT on school fees. Families who have personnel serving abroad this Christmas will have ju

defence
612
18 Nov 2024 Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

At all times, and on both sides of the House, we should want to ensure that our armed forces have our back and that their morale and the offer from the MOD is as strong as possible. The Opposition recognise that the Bill introduces a manifesto commitment for which the Government have a clear mandate and, moreover, that

defence
1,090
13 Nov 2024Chagos Islands

On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker.

defenceimmigration
8
13 Nov 2024Chagos Islands

Yes, very much so.

defenceimmigration
4
13 Nov 2024Chagos Islands

Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker. Obviously, the issue of cost is of huge importance, because it is public money, and the Opposition think that the public should know about the cost involved in this agreement. The Minister said to my hon. Friend the Member for Hamble Valley (Paul Holmes) that the Government do not give

defenceimmigration
216
11 Nov 2024 Point of Order

On a point of order, Mr Speaker. You know how strongly the House feels about the Government’s decision on the Chagos islands. The Defence Secretary has made it very clear today that the Government know what the cost of that settlement will be to the Ministry of Defence. Many colleagues have repeatedly asked, through or

defencefiscal-policy
101
11 Nov 2024Defence: 2.5% GDP Spending Commitment

Thank you for granting this urgent question, Mr Speaker, especially on Armistice Day. I am grateful for the Secretary of State’s response, but he keeps going back to 2010 when we spent 2.5%. That is true, but he says it without adding the fact that his Government had bankrupted the country. In fact, I asked the House o

defencefiscal-policy
541
11 Nov 2024Defence: 2.5% GDP Spending Commitment

(Urgent Question): To ask the Secretary of State for Defence if he will make a statement on his commitment to spend 2.5% of GDP on defence.

defencefiscal-policy
26
28 Oct 2024 Remembrance and Veterans

With respect, I think the hon. Gentleman misses the point of my speech. As I said at the beginning, I am here to talk about remembrance, and I sincerely believe that the best way to honour the fallen is by learning the lessons of the past. That means always standing up for our country and ensuring that we have the stro

defenceculture-communitysocial-care
655
28 Oct 2024 Remembrance and Veterans

I join the Secretary of State in congratulating our brilliant Royal Marines on their 360th anniversary. This timely and important debate coincides with Mr Speaker’s official opening of the constituency garden of remembrance earlier today. It marks the point where, as a House, we pay tribute to all those who serve and h

defenceculture-communitysocial-care
675
21 Oct 2024Ukraine

I thank the Secretary of State for advance sight of his statement. I offer my condolences and those of Opposition Members to the family and friends of Corporal Christopher Gill, who we understand tragically lost his life during a training exercise recently. We understand that he served his country for 13 years, includi

defenceeconomy-jobs
685
13 Oct 2024Strategic Defence Review

That is a concern. In 2010, just to remind the House, the black hole in the defence budget was bigger than the defence budget, and we were left a note saying that there was no money left. It is significant if the wording is no longer “as soon as possible” and is now “in due course”. It is in the national interest to go

defenceeconomy-jobs
116
13 Oct 2024Strategic Defence Review

Thank you, Mr Speaker. I associate all of us in my party with your comments about the late Alex Salmond. The most important point about the SDR is that it must not be used as an excuse to delay increasing the defence budget to 2.5% of GDP. In September, in answers to written questions, the Department said that it would

defenceeconomy-jobs
117
13 Oct 2024Topical Questions

Thousands of children of armed forces personnel face unaffordable increases to their school fees because of this Government’s ideological decision to charge VAT on education. That could have the perverse effect of forcing experienced personnel to quit the service of their country just when we should be seeking to maxim

defencehousinglabour-market
85
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.